What is Propaganda?

The word "propaganda" has some negative associations; people
often associate it with dishonesty and lies. The working definition is, however:

"Propaganda consists of the planned use of any form of public or
mass-produced communication designed to affect the minds and emotions of a given group for
a specific purpose, whether military, economic, or political."

"Propaganda consists of the planned use of any form of
communication designed to affect the minds, emotions, and action of a given group for a
specific purpose."

(page 39)

White, Grey, and Black Propaganda

From Psychological Warfare, page 44

White propaganda is issued from an acknowledged source... This
type of propaganda is associated with overt psychological operations.

Grey propaganda does not clearly identify any source.

Black propaganda purports to emanate from a source other than the
true one. This type of propaganda is associated with covert psychological operations.

Example of Black Propaganda

Guard Against Venereal Diseases

Lately there has been a great increase in the number of venereal
diseases among our officers and men owing to prolific contacts with Filipino women of
dubious character.

Due to hard times and stricken conditions brought about by the Japanese
occupation of the islands, Filipino women are willing to offer themselves for a small
amount of foodstuffs. It is advisable in such cases to take full protective measures by
use of condoms, protective medicines, etc.; better still to hold intercourse only with
wives, virgins, or women of respective [sic] character.Furthermore, in view of the increase in pro-American leanings, many
Filipino women are more than willing to offer themselves to American soldiers, and due to
the fact that Filipinos have no knowledge of hygiene, disease carriers are rampant and due
care must be taken.

U.S. Army

(Source: Psychological Warfare, page 123). Now, do you think this
was an anti-VD leaflet that was given to American troops? It was actually dropped on
Filipinos by the Japanese! The Japanese propagandists wanted Filipinos to believe
that the United States was the origin of this derogatory material, thereby reducing
cooperation with the United States.

Effective Propaganda

The best propaganda often drives a wedge between the
other side's leaders and its rank-and-file members. The effectiveness of such propaganda
depends on the enemy leaders' conduct.

Desertion Leaflet from Bunker Hill (Linebarger, p. 21)

Prospect Hill [where the British officers
were quartered?]

Seven Dollars a month

Fresh Provisions, and in Plenty

Health

Freedom, Ease, Affluence and a good Farm

Bunker Hill

Three Pence a Day

Rotten Salt Pork

The Scurvy

Slavery, Beggary and Want

This leaflet does not indicate its source, so it is grey
propaganda (see definition below). "Artful use was made of the sharp class
distinctions then existing between British officers and enlisted men; fear was exploited
as an aid to persuasion; the language was pointed." Linebarger calls this "a
classic example of how to do good field propaganda." A similar pro-Japanese
propaganda leaflet from the Second World War (India theatre) shows an English family
enjoying a lavish meal while Hindus starve in the streets.

A Nazi leaflet, "The Girl You Left Behind" shows an American
soldier's girlfriend being courted, and eventually seduced, by Jewish war profiteer
"Sam Levy." The soldier eventually comes home without a leg to find his girl in
a fur coat and in the possession of the Jew. "Sam has no scruples about getting a bit
intimate with Joan. And why should he have any? Tall and handsome Bob Harrison, Joan's
fiancÚ, is on the front, thousands of miles away, fighting for guys like Sam Levy." (Linebarger,
pp. 138-139) The effectiveness of this leaflet's anti-Semitism among
American GIs might have been dampened by the presence of Jewish buddies at the front
("The Jewish guy in my outfit is roughing it out here with the rest of us"), but
it could still have promoted the idea that certain privileged individuals could avoid
military service and profit from the war. The United States was certainly more vulnerable
to the latter attack during the Vietnam War, when civilians at home did not even have to
endure rationing as they did during the Second World War.

Effective First World War propaganda would have shown
generals living in comfortable chateaux (they did!) while they ordered their troops into
senseless battles. The cartoon of an enemy general dining on an expensive meal a
comfortable manor while his soldiers lived in a cold and wet trench should have been
obvious to the propagandists (if their own generals weren't doing the same thing.) Such
propaganda follows Sun Tzu's advice to foment divisions between leaders and followers.

Sample "desertion leaflet," gun control issue

Leaders of the Gun Control Movement: Dianne
Feinstein, Ted Kennedy, various Hollywood celebrities

Gun permits issued to the elite few, the lords of the manor (e.g.
Feinstein)

Armed bodyguards (e.g. Kennedy)

Protected, gated communities and expensive security systems

Speaking honorariums, publicity, and votes

The Common Citizen who Supports Gun Control

Not entitled to police protection (according to various court rulings)

Defenseless against violent criminals

Entitled only to give his or her money and vote to the antigun
movement's leaders

Attack the Enemy Leaders

"In estimating the propaganda situation, the vulnerability of the
leaders to personal attack is one of the major elements. Properly handled, it can be of
real value." (p. 157) Linebarger points out that George Washington was a major asset
during the American Revolution because his personal character could not be attacked
effectively. Members of the Continental Congress were, however, vulnerable to British
propaganda. American propagandists could, meanwhile, attack King George III and many
members of his Cabinet as "boors, fuddy-duddies, too-little-and-too-laters, and
conspicuous nincompoops."

A Nazi leaflet showed Franklin Roosevelt as the Grim Reaper, who was
scything down American soldiers while saying, "I assure you again and again that no
American boys will be sacrificed on foreign battlefields" (quoted from Roosevelt,
10/31/1940). The basic idea was correct, but the leaflet's effectiveness must have been
reduced by the fact that the Nazis' ally Japan attacked us, and then Hitler declared war
on us.

Class differences, especially those between the privileged elite (see
examples above) and the rank-and-file, can often be exploited.

Mistakes in Propaganda

Do not direct propaganda against the opposing side's rank-and-file.
They are the people whom you want to persuade to cease resistance, malinger, desert,
mutiny, or even change sides.

"Sending the Japanese cartoons of themselves, mocking the German
language, calling Italians by familiar but inelegant names- such communications cropped up
during the [Second World] war. The senders got a lot of fun out of the message but the
purpose was unintelligently considered. The actual effect was to annoy the enemy,
stiffening his will to resist." (Linebarger, p. 40. Emphasis is mine)

"Then go after the Propaganda Man [hypothetical listener on the
other side] yourself. He is your friend. You are his friend. The only enemy is the enemy
Leader (or generals, or emperor, or capitalists, or 'They')." (Linebarger, p.
154) The rank-and-file member of the opposing side is not a villain,
he is a victim. His leader or boss is exploiting him. The opposing leader is not
only your enemy, but your listener's enemy as well.

"For psychological warfare purposes, it is useful to define the
enemy as: (1) the ruler, (2) or the ruling group, (3) or unspecified manipulators, (4) or
any definite minority. It is thoroughly unsound to define the enemy too widely." (p.
51) The rank-and-file member of the opposing side is not "the enemy." He or she
is a victim of the enemies suggested by Linebarger: his/her ruler, ruling group,
etc. "The sound psychological warfare operator will try to get enemy troops to
believing that the enemy is not themselves but somebody else- the King, the Fuhrer, the
elite troops, the capitalists. ... 'We're not fighting you. We are fighting the
So-and-so's who are misleading you.'"

Antigun cartoonist Benson's depiction of a beer-swilling, beer-bellied,
unkempt, apparently uneducated "NRA member," while in the same category as the
Nazis' depiction of Jews with exaggerated Semitic features, probably backfired by
antagonizing every National Rifle Association member who saw it, along with many other
responsible firearm owners.

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